- Home
- /
- Trending-News
- /
- Osinbajo urges NIPSS...
Osinbajo urges NIPSS to collaborate on food security, others
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has urged the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) to plan, interpret, and predict trends in food security, technology, climate change, and other related phenomena.
Osinbajo gave this charge on Thursday at the Presidential Villa while inaugurating the newly constituted 11-man Board of Trustees of the NIPSS Endowment Fund, chaired by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa'ad Abubakar.
Other members of the board physically present were the Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse III, Gbong Gwom, Jos, Dr. Jacob Buba, Prof. Adeolu Akande, Chairman, Nigerian Communications Commission, Mr. Marc Wabara, Mr. Yusuf Alli, Prof. Hilary Inyang, and Dr. Sarah Jibril.
Members of the board who were unavoidably absent were the Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiola, Mr. Julius Adeluyi, and Dr. Kalu Idika Kalu, former Minister of Finance.
The vice-president commended the chairman and members for accepting to serve in the board.
Osinbajo said that since 1979, when NIPSS was established, it had proven to be the foremost institution for reflection, ideation, and research, as its mandate actually prescribed.
"In the coming years, it would perhaps become even more challenging to do much more in the coming years."
"And for many of us who are watching and studying, I think it is very evident that what we see and the challenges we face as I speak now—not just local challenges but global challenges—are of an order that require great introspection, thinking, and planning.
"So, I believe that NIPSS and what we are trying to constitute today is one that would have to plan, predict, and interpret the trends of the coming years, and those trends would be many.
"One would be the various challenges that the world would face; we are facing, aside from food security, huge problems of poverty at a scale that appears to be increasing all across the world—and I speak not just for our own region—all across the world," Osinbajo said.
The vice president also said that the world was moving very quickly with technology, adding, "As a matter of fact, it would appear as though the world is moving literally on technology steroids."
"We are moving so quickly that it is possible that if we are not at the cutting edge, we will be left behind."
"Also, there would be problems; we have already seen climate change and all its implications for the future of our planet and for the future of our socio-economic circumstances around the world, in particular in developing countries, and of course in Nigeria."
Osinbajo said that the think tanks that were best known all over the world were the places where the creative ideas and the solutions of the future were born.
The vice president said that he believed very strongly that NIPSS had an opportunity to become one of the leading and foremost thought leaders soon.
He added: "There is so much the world itself does not know about, and I think that this is the right opportunity for NIPSS to really take on the mandate."
"It should use that mandate creatively, not just to influence Nigeria and prepare Nigeria for the future, but to prepare our region and the world for the future."
"This is why I think the constitution of the Board of Trustees is important."
Osinbajo said it was absurd to think that the foremost think tank in Nigeria would be run like a civil service institution and would depend almost on a daily basis on whatever it got from the budget.
He said that no major think tank in the world would be run like that.
"And the reason is because the independence of the think tank is also important; and I speak now of academic independence."
" Academic independence is not just the freedom of speech; that's not what is even important.
" It is more of the ability to do unconstrained research without the constraint of resources; you should not be constrained by resources given the enormity of the task that the institute has.
"That is why I think that the role of the board of trustees is so well cut out for it."
"We expect that the board, aside from everything else, will lead in looking for resources that will put NIPPS in a position to be able to face the challenges of the future, and those resources are mainly financial resources," he said.
The vice president said he was pleased that some renowned traditional rulers were part of the board, as their immense knowledge and wealth of experience would be impactful.
Osinbajo-Mabajo also inaugurated the Academic Advisory Committee of NIPSS.
Members of the committee are Amb. Martin Uhomoibhi, retired Maj.-Gen. Inuwa Idris, Prof. Ike Nwachukwu, Prof. Joh Laah, Prof. Yemisi Fawolw, Prof. Abiodun Alao, and Dr. Fatima Akilu.
Earlier in his remarks, the Director-General of NIPSS, Prof. Ayo Omotayo, expressed optimism that the board and the committee would deliver on their mandates.
Responding on behalf of the two bodies inaugurated, Abubakar said that think tanks around the world were contributing to national growth; hence, Nigeria must harness the potential of NIPSS.